Themed issue on roots and impact of cultural evolution features SFI research

Construction of the New River Gorge Bridge, courtesy NPS

February 13, 2018

Culture — the ability to communicate ideas across vast networks and over generations — is part of what makes our species uniquely human. But how did our capacity for culture arise, and how has it impacted our evolution?

In a themed issue in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, B, a collection of papers from diverse fields tackles these questions. "The aim of this issue is to advance interdisciplinary discussion of the roles that culture plays in shaping the course of human evolution," write the issue’s editors — SFI External Professor Marcus Feldman, SFI collaborator Oren Kolodny, and Nicole Creanza (Vanderbilt University).

The issue, Bridging cultural gaps: interdisciplinary studies in human cultural evolution, draws on insights from anthropology, archaeology, biology, computer science, ecology, and psychology. "The papers in this theme issue demonstrate that the study of cultural evolution is broadly relevant across many disciplines and that numerous fields can also shed new light on cultural evolution," write the editors.

Below are links to articles within the issue with SFI-affiliated co-authors: